The European Union in Prophecy The EU in Prophecy I | Page 452
The European Union in Prophecy
Brilliancy of style is not necessarily an index of pure, elevated thought. High
conceptions of art, delicate refinement of taste, often exist in minds that are earthly
and sensual. They are often employed by Satan to lead men to forget the necessities
of the soul, to lose sight of the future, immortal life, to turn away from their infinite
Helper, and to live for this world alone.
A religion of externals is attractive to the unrenewed heart. The pomp and
ceremony of the Catholic worship has a seductive, bewitching power, by which many
are deceived; and they come to look upon the Roman Church as the very gate of heaven.
None but those who have planted their feet firmly upon the foundation of truth, and
whose hearts are renewed by the Spirit of God, are proof against her influence.
Thousands who have not an experimental knowledge of Christ will be led to accept
the forms of godliness without the power. Such a religion is just what the multitudes
desire.
The church's claim to the right to pardon leads the Romanist to feel at liberty to
sin; and the ordinance of confession, without which her pardon is not granted, tends
also to give license to evil. He who kneels before fallen man, and opens in confession
the secret thoughts and imaginations of his heart, is debasing his manhood and
degrading every noble instinct of his soul. In unfolding the sins of his life to a priest,-
-an erring, sinful mortal, and too often corrupted with wine and licentiousness,--his
standard of character is lowered, and he is defiled in consequence. His thought of God
is degraded to the likeness of fallen humanity, for the priest stands as a representative
of God. This degrading confession of man to man is the secret spring from which has
flowed much of the evil that is defiling the world and fitting it for the final destruction.
Yet to him who loves self-indulgence, it is more pleasing to confess to a fellow mortal
than to open the soul to God. It is more palatable to human nature to do penance than
to renounce sin; it is easier to mortify the flesh by sackcloth and nettles and galling
chains than to crucify fleshly lusts. Heavy is the yoke which the carnal heart is willing
to bear rather than bow to the yoke of Christ.
There is a striking similarity between the Church of Rome and the Jewish
Church at the time of Christ's first advent. While the Jews secretly trampled upon
every principle of the law of God, they were outwardly rigorous in the observance of
its precepts, loading it down with exactions and traditions that made obedience
451